Classification

Distribution

Generally considered endemic to coastal watersheds of Guyana and Suriname with type locality the Essequibo River, Guyana, but recent records suggest it or a similar-looking, unidentified congener may also occur in the Río Orinoco and rio Negro drainages in Venezuela and Brazil.

Habitat

Lowland rivers, creeks and tributaries, more rarely pools or impoundments.

Maximum Standard Length

Maintenance

Not difficult to keep in a well-maintained set-up, though we recommend aquascaping the tank to resemble a flowing stream or river with a substrate of variably-sized, water-worn rocks, sand, fine gravel and perhaps some small boulders.

This can be further furnished with driftwood roots or branches, and aquatic plants can be used should you wish although softer-leaved varieties may be nibbled.

Though torrent-like conditions are unnecessary it also does best if there is a high proportion of dissolved oxygen and moderate water movement, while weekly water changes of 30-50% tank volume should be considered routine.

Water Conditions

Diet

Stomach analyses of wild specimens have shown it to be an opportunistic omnivore consuming a variety of aquatic invertebrates, insects, algae and plant material, though it’s unclear what proportion of the latter is consumed via the gut contents of prey items.

In the aquarium it’s easily-fed but the best condition and colours offer regular meals of small live and frozen foods such as bloodworm, Daphnia and Artemia, alongside good quality dried flakes and granules, at least some of which should include additional plant or algal content.

Peaceful but it can intimidate much smaller or more quiet species with its relatively large size and somewhat vigorous behaviour, particulñarly at feeding times.

It makes an ideal addition to larger community aquaria, where it can be combined with similarly-sized characids, cichlids such as Geophagus, Satanoperca, or Heros spp., callichthyid, and loricariid catfishes.

It’s a schoolingspecies by nature so ideally 8-10 specimens should be purchased.

Maintaining it in decent numbers will not only make the fish less skittish but result in a more effective, natural looking display, plus any aggressive behaviour will normally be contained as the fish concentrate on maintaining their hierarchical position within the group.

Sexual Dimorphism

Adult females grow a little larger than males and are noticeably rounder-bellied when gravid, while males possess very small hook-like extensions on the anal-fin rays.

Reproduction

We’ve been unable to locate any detailed record but according to Baensch, spawning is possible in large aquaria and a single female may deposit up to 2000 eggs in a single event.

This should be very dimly lit and the base covered with some kind of mesh of a large enough grade so that the eggs can fall through but small enough so that the adults cannot reach them, or largely filled with fine-leaved plant such as Taxiphyllum spp.

The adults should be removed post-spawning with fry swimming freely after around six days.

The group is often referred to collectively as ‘silver dollar tetras’ and though B. orbicularis is normally said to be the species in the aquarium trade identification is challenging.

Following Reis (1989) it can be told apart from congeners by a combination of nine branched dorsal-fin rays plus a relatively long predorsal spine measuring 5.7-9.3 % SL and 17.5-29.0 % of the dorsal length of the head.

The genus Brachychalcinus is often included in the putative subfamily Stethaprioninae, members of which are distinguished from other characids by their deep, sometimes disc-like, body shape and possession of an anteriorly-orientated, osseous spine in front of the first dorsal-fin ray with the first anal-fin element modified into a similar structure (Reis, 1989).